Descendants of William Hascall of Fontmell Magna (1490-1542)

Notes


28693. Mary P. Reynolds

Marblehead Messenger
April 7, 1933

Committal services were held Wednesday afternoon at Waterside Cemetery for Mrs. Mary (Reynolds) Chapin, widow of George Chapin, who died in San Francisco, Calif. March 19.

Mrs. Chapin was born in Marblehead, the daughter of the late Henry P. and Christine Reynolds of Marblehead. She leaves a brother, Henry E. Reynolds of Marblehead and a sister, Miss Hattie Reynolds of Talmadge, Calif.


13889. William Thomas Haskell

William Thomas Haskell was a trader and shoe manufacturer.


Richardson Knowland

Richardson Knowland was a shoe manufacturer.


Richard Evans

Richard Evans was a shipmaster.


28721. Harold Haskell Brown

New York, Abstracts of World War I Military Service, 1917-1919
Name: Harold H Brown
Birth Place: Boston, Massachusetts
Birth Date: 4 Nov 1872
Service Start Date:27 Nov 1917
Service Start Age:45


13898. Thomas Coombs Haskell

Thomas Coombs Haskell was a shoemaker.


13899. William Ambrose Haskell

William Ambrose Haskell was a mariner.


John H. Preston Jr.

John Preston, son of John Preston, was born in Salem 1821 and died in that city, August 21, 1891.

For many years he carried on a bakery, was perhaps one of the most widely known business men in the city, and doubtless he was best known to the people of the vicinity by reason of his long service of more than forty years in the capacity of overseer of the poor, in which he dispensed alms not alone from the public funds but from his own purse as well, and during the period of his ownership of the bakery thousands of needy persons were supplied from his store and no charge whatever was made of the matter.

For many years, it was his custom to provide a substantial repast for the unfortunate inmates of the city almshouse on both Thanksgiving and Christmas days, and he always took especial pleasure in being able to relieve distress among the sick and needy families of the city.

For many years, too, he was a member of the school committee and gave efficient service in advancing the educational work of the city schools, and when he finally retired from the board he was presented with a gold-headed cane by the teachers of the public schools as a token of their esteem for him. Mr Preston was an earnest member of the Tabernacle Church and a regular attendant at the usual weekly services.

Source : Genealogical and Personal Memoirs Relating to the Families of Boston and Eastern Massachusetts
by  William Richard Cutter
Published in 1908